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Chapter 21
The Furnace of Civil
War 1861–1865
The Army of the Potomac Marching up Pennsylvania Avenue,
Washington, D.C., 1861
In this painting, Union troops parade before the Battle of Bull Run. Colorfully uniformed, they
are a regiment of Zouaves, who adopted the name and style of military dress from a
legendarily dashing French infantry unit. But bright uniforms were not enough to win battles,
and these troops were soon to be routed by the Confederates.
West Point Museum, United States Military Academy
Masterly Inactivity, or Six Months on the Potomac, 1862
McClellan and his Confederate foe view each other cautiously while their troops engage
in visits, weddings, and sports.
Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper.
Peninsula Campaign, 1862
Nearly paralyzed by his fear of failure,
diverted supply lines and
reinforcements, the once cocky George
McClellan just barely managed to
capture the Confederate city of
Yorktown and eventually was forced to
abandon his Peninsula Campaign. The
campaign was viewed as a costly
failure and temporarily cost McClellan
command of the Army of the Potomac.
Copyright (c) Houghton Mifflin Company. All Rights Reserved.
Civil War Scene (detail)
A Federal brigade repulses a Confederate assault at Williamsburg, Virginia, in 1862, as
the Peninsula Campaign presses toward Richmond. General Winfield Scott Hancock
commanded the troops. For his success in this action, Hancock earned the nickname
“The Superb.”
Smithsonian Institution
Main Thrusts, 1861–1865
Northern strategists at first believed that the rebellion could be snuffed out quickly by a
swift, crushing blow. But the stiffness of Southern resistance to the Union’s early probes,
and the North’s inability to strike with sufficient speed and severity, revealed that the
conflict would be a war of attrition, long and bloody.
Copyright (c) Houghton Mifflin Company. All Rights Reserved.
Emancipation in the South
President Lincoln believed that emancipation of the slaves, accompanied by
compensation to their owners, would be fairest to the South. He formally proposed such
an amendment to the Constitution in December 1862. What finally emerged was the
Thirteenth Amendment of 1865, which freed all slaves without compensation.
Copyright (c) Houghton Mifflin Company. All Rights Reserved.
Recruiting Black Troops in
Boston, 1863
Led by the white Boston Brahmin
Robert Gould Shaw, the 54th
Massachusetts Regiment lost nearly
half its men, including Shaw, in a futile
attack on South Carolina’s Fort Wagner
in July 1863. A memorial to the
regiment stands today on the Boston
Common.
Courtesy of the Massachusetts Historical Society
A Bit of War History: Contraband, Recruit, Veteran, by Thomas
Waterman Wood, 1865–1866
This painting dramatically commemorates the contributions and sacrifices of the 180,000
African Americans who served in the Union army during the Civil War.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of Charles Stewart Smith, 1884 (84.12a/b/c) Photograph ©1991 The
Metropolitan Museum of Art
A Study in Black and White
Soldiers of the 7th Tennessee Cavalry posed with their slaves-- whose bondage the
Confederacy fought to perpetuate.
Michael Latil
McClellan as Mediator, 1865
This 1865 poster shows Presidents Lincoln and Davis trying to tear the country in half,
while former general George McClellan, the candidate of the Democratic party, attempts
to mediate.
Library of Congress
Presidential Election of 1864 (showing popular vote by county)
Lincoln also carried California, Oregon, and Nevada, but there was a considerable
McClellan vote in each. Note McClellan’s strength in the Border States and in the
southern tier of Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois--the so-called “Butternut” region.
Copyright (c) Houghton Mifflin Company. All Rights Reserved.
Grant’s Virginia Campaign, 1864–1865
The Wilderness Campaign pitted soldier against desperate soldier in some of the most
brutal and terrifying fighting of the Civil War. “No one could see the fight fifty feet from
him,” a Union private recalled of his month spent fighting in Virginia. “The lines were very
near each other, and from the dense underbrush and the tops of trees came puffs of
smoke, the ‘ping’ of the bullets and the yell of the enemy. It was a blind and bloody hunt
to the death, in bewildering thickets, rather than a battle.”
Copyright (c) Houghton Mifflin Company. All Rights Reserved.
The Burning of Richmond, April 1865
The proud Confederate capital, after holding out against repeated Union assaults, was
evacuated and burned in the final days of the war.
Library of Congress
New York Mourns Lincoln’s Death, April 25, 1865
Lincoln’s body traveled by train to lie in state in fourteen cities before arriving at his
final resting place of Springfield, Illinois. In New York City, 160,000 mourners
accompanied the hearse as the funeral procession slowly made its way down
Broadway. Scalpers sold choice window seats for four dollars and up. Blacks were
barred from participating, until the mayor changed his mind at the last minute--but only
if they marched at the rear. This souvenir stereo view, bringing the scene to threedimensional life when seen through the popular device of a hand-held stereopticon,
allowed many more Americans to observe the funeral than could be there in person
The Granger Collection
Nora August: The Fruits of
Emancipation
An unidentified Union soldier carved
this ivory bust of the freedwoman Nora
August during the Civil War. Note the
elaborately braided hair--a direct
adaptation of a West African style. The
anonymous sculptor etched the
following legend into the base of the
statue: “Carved from life. Retreat
Plantation. Presented to the Nurses of
Darien GA in the year of Our Lord 1865.
Nora August (slave). Age 23 years.
Purchased from the Market, St.
Augustine, Florida, April 17th 1860.
Now a Free Woman.”
Sea Island Company
Prisoners from the Front, by Winslow Homer, 1866
This celebrated painting reflects the artist’s firsthand observations of the war. Homer
brilliantly captured the enduring depths of sectional animosity. The Union officer
somewhat disdainfully asserts his command of the situation; the beaten and disarmed
Confederates exhibit an out-at-the-elbows pride and defiance.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Gift of Mrs. Frank B. Porter, 1922 (22.207)